Cseri Miklós - Horváth Anita - Szabó Zsuzsanna (szerk.): Discover Rural Hungary!, Guide (Szentendre, Hungarian Open Air Museum, 2007)
VII Southern Transdanubia - VII-5 House from Szenna
• Homespun fabric from Szenna Szenna was famous for its ornate woven fabrics, and people came from great distances to buy the special patterns. In the front room hand-woven, red-striped pillows and feather bedding can be seen on the beds. ing. Both rooms were heated by tiled stoves stoked from the kitchen. Strangely there were no wardrobes in the house and clothes were kept in the chest in the front room. This has a lower part made up of two drawers with its upper section being a chest with a lid that could be opened up. In the yard there is a pigsty with wing-walls and a thatched shed stands in the barn enclosure. Visit the Open Air Museum in Szenna when roaming around Somogy County! • Beds and sleeping People slept in pairs. Typically members of the Deák family slept outside the house. Even the last ownei; Ilona Deák slept with her husband in the stable. There was a bed on the porch under the window of the back room where the old couple spent the night even in winter It was usual to keep the sleigh on the porch and use it as a summer bed. The newborn baby slept in a trough cradle then later in a standing one up to the age of 3-4. 97